Women’s Rights are Human Rights
By Stu Asbel on July 17, 2008 at 5:01 AM in Hillary Clinton, Women's Suffrage
This Saturday, Juy 19, 2008, marks the 160th anniversary of the first Women’s Rights Convention that was held in Seneca Falls, NY on July 19, 1848. There are many events planned at the park, two of which honor Hillary.
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On March 25, 1911 a tragedy struck the city of New York that forever changed the Women’s Movement. Near closing time, from an unknown source, a fire ripped through the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory killing 146 people. Of those, 126 were women. Though valiant efforts were made to save the Triangle workers, a locked exit and inadequate fire escapes doomed many of the immigrant men and women that worked there. The grizzly scene of young girls holding hands with their coworkers, leaping to their deaths, rather than face the flames behind them, their burned and mangled bodies strewn upon the sidewalk, shocked the nation.
The women’s labor movement had been called to action two years earlier by Clara Lemlich, a 19 year old Ukranian Jewish immigrant who had been savagely beaten for her union involvement. Her modest but impassioned call for a vote for action began a shirtwaist makers’ strike that rocked New York City.
The movement found new force in the deaths of the young women in the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire, an event which also drove the final push in the fight to secure the right of franchise for women in America, as was seen at the 1912 New York City March for Suffrage. Some 20,000 people marched. A reported half million lined the streets. But the coals that stoked the fires of these movements were not kindled on those ill fated floors of the Asch Building in Manhattan. The match was struck upstate, with relative quiet, 63 years earlier in the town of Seneca Falls.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott found themselves in a situation oft repeated in the past 160 years. Denied seats at the 1840 anti-slavery convention in London, due to their gender, Mott and Stanton agreed that a convention on women’s rights needed to be held. Eight years later it came to pass, the result of Mott visiting family in a nearby town not far from Stanton’s home in Seneca Falls.
In April the New York Married Woman’s Property Rights Act had been passed. Neither felt that this act fully addressed women’s property issues. In their view it was clearly time for women to take responsibility for presenting their issues, and moving their agenda forward. The action they decided on was simple; initiate a conversation on the condition of women in society, and their inalienable rights as members of that society.
The call was unassuming. An unsigned notice was placed in the local paper advertising the meeting. Three hundred-forty women and forty men, most from within a five mile radius, attended the convention.
The task of constructing a declarative document fell upon Stanton. Using the Declaration of Independence as her guide she constructed what she entitled the Declaration of Sentiments. Within this document lay the undeniable and unshakable truth still contested by the ignorant today (some of whom can be seen blathering away on an almost daily basis on cable television news networks): ‘All men and all women are created equal.’
Listen to the Women.
One hundred and forty-seven years later, then First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, went to Beijing to address an international women’s conference themed, ‘Listen to the Women.’ In a singular act of bravery, and at great political and personal risk, Senator Clinton, standing on the shoulders of Stanton, Mott, Anthony, Lemlich, Roosevelt and others too many to name, changed the course of the conversation of women’s rights forever. Echoing Stanton’s declaration she proclaimed to the world; ‘Women’s rights are human rights, and human rights are women’s rights.’
In other words, women’s rights: they’re not just for women anymore.
It is no longer acceptable to discuss women’s rights as being owned solely by women. This is an issue of what it means to be human. In 1995 Hillary Clinton made it plain that it is no longer acceptable for anyone, regardless of gender, skin color, religion, sexual orientation, age, nationality, or creed to be oppressed whether it be physically, emotionally, sexually, or economically, and that it is time for all of us to take responsibility for protecting and defending each other’s rights to live lives of freedom and equality. Whether it is being paid equal wages for equal time, access to the same employment opportunities, or to share our lives with the partners of our choice, every American citizen should have equal protection under the Constitution of the United States, and every citizen of the world should be recognized as having equal protection of their inalienable human rights. There is only one race; the human race. When the rights of one human are violated, we are all violated. When one of us has obstacles thrown up against them, is oppressed, insulted, attacked, or enslaved then we are obligated by our mutual humanity to stand up in their defense. That is what Dr. King saw from the top of the mountain.
Please remember that Saturday is the 160th anniversary of the first Women’s Rights Convention that was held in Seneca Falls, NY on July 19, 1848. There are many events planned at the park, two of which honor Hillary.


















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